1. Magnetic and Non-Magnetic Materials
Magnetic materials
Some materials are affected by magnets. These are called magnetic materials.
Examples:
- Iron
- Steel
- Nickel
- Cobalt
Properties:
- They are attracted to magnets
- They can be magnetised
Non-magnetic materials
Most materials are not affected by magnets.
Examples:
- Wood
- Plastic
- Aluminium
- Copper
- Glass
Properties:
- They are not attracted to magnets
- They cannot be magnetised
Only certain materials have the correct internal structure to show magnetism.
2. Why Magnets Have Magnetism (Domain Model)
Electrons and magnetism
Magnetism comes from electrons inside atoms.
- Electrons are moving electric charges
- A moving electric charge creates a magnetic field
- Each electron therefore produces a tiny magnetic field
In many atoms, the magnetic fields from electrons cancel out.
In some materials (like iron), they do not cancel completely.
Magnetic domains
In magnetic materials:
- Groups of atoms form regions called magnetic domains
- Inside each domain, the magnetic fields from electrons are aligned
- Each domain acts like a tiny bar magnet
Why most objects are not magnets
In an unmagnetised magnetic material:
- Domains point in different directions
- Their magnetic fields cancel out
- The object has no overall magnetism
This is why a piece of iron is usually not a magnet.
How a permanent magnet gets its magnetism
When a magnetic material is magnetised:
- Many domains line up in the same direction
- Their magnetic fields add together
- The object develops a net magnetic field
If the domains stay aligned, the object becomes a permanent magnet.
3. Induced Magnets
What is an induced magnet?
An induced magnet is a material that becomes magnetised only when it is in a magnetic field.
How induced magnetism happens
When a magnetic material is placed near a magnet:
- The magnetic field causes domains to realign
- The object becomes temporarily magnetised
When the magnet is removed:
- The domains return to a more random arrangement
- The magnetism disappears
Properties of induced magnets
- Always attracted to a magnet
- Magnetism is temporary
- Common in soft iron
Example:
- An iron nail sticks to a magnet but falls off when the magnet is removed.
4. Magnetically ‘Soft’ and Magnetically ‘Hard’ Materials
Magnetically soft materials
Magnetically soft materials are:
- Easy to magnetise
- Easy to demagnetise
What happens inside:
- Domains move and realign easily
- Domains do not stay aligned for long
Example:
- Soft iron
Uses:
- Electromagnets
- Transformer cores
These materials are useful where magnetism needs to switch on and off.
Magnetically hard materials
Magnetically hard materials are:
- Difficult to magnetise
- Difficult to demagnetise
What happens inside:
- Domains are harder to move
- Once aligned, domains stay aligned
Example:
- Steel
Uses:
- Permanent magnets
- Compass needles
These materials are used where magnetism needs to be permanent.
5. Overall Summary
- Only some materials are magnetic
- Magnetism comes from moving electrons
- Magnetic domains explain why materials can be magnetised
- Permanent magnets have aligned domains that stay aligned
- Induced magnets are temporary
- Soft magnetic materials lose magnetism easily
- Hard magnetic materials keep magnetism